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Sequence 4Following the impressionist study of the earth's formation the children embark on a more technical level examining the… |
Sequence 4One of the discoveries that you will make is that there will be only a few rhymes that apply to the prehistory time line, but… |
Sequence 5wage of a skilled craftsman. Their value, in Europe, was high until late in the Middle Ages when a European Cardinal received… |
Sequence 3facilities for those students desiring it. This will allow youth who live beyond convenient commute distance to benefit from… |
Sequence 3Joosten: It is a kind of in-service training for a regular institution, so not like we have the pre-primary and primary people… |
Sequence 9j5Tovide a synthesis clarifying values and bringing the adolescent to a higher level of self awareness. The Erdkinder would… |
Sequence 3At the end of that period everything was together, the showroom, the factory, the offices and the warehouse, but the… |
Sequence 3seeds of interest. The economy and extent of the program are realistic. We give the child a basic orientation through which he… |
Sequence 1Psychoanalysis and Education by Lil.i Peller Ms. Pellers work with Anna Freud and Montessori presents an interesting blend of… |
Sequence 1Psychoanalysis and Montessori: The Development of the Child's Self by Lili Peller Ms. Peller presents a psychoanalytic… |
Sequence 5care situations. Is it a danger to prescribe a nursery school situation for unenlightened parents? What becomes of a child who… |
Sequence 3aspect. Our reasons for this deviation are sound. Dr. Montessori wrote her recommendations perhaps with the model of pre-sex… |
Sequence 1Feature Article: The Future of Montessori in America by Sanford Jones Mr. Jones· keynote lecture at the NAMTA Washington… |
Sequence 1Towards Improving Human Ecology Bronfenbrenner Kahn Interview Dr. Bronfenbrenner in his stirring description of the social… |
Sequence 4"Community" begins to become a reality for the young child when he/she apprehends that each person has… |
Sequence 1The Administrator: Leader or Officeholder? by Robert M. Hutchins Robert M. Hutchins made a major impact on the theories and… |
Sequence 1Editorial Report: Training, The Teacher, and Praxis By David Kahn AMI training must address the whole Montessori picture,… |
Sequence 22 conservative pressures for skills in the private school market. And with the private school rush for alternative elementary… |
Sequence 1Language, the Basis of Humanism by J.H. Pestalozzi Pestalozzi is mentioned in Montessori's early works as a principal… |
Sequence 236 The Child's Nature: The Child's Need to Anticipate By Lili E. Peller •Planning a child's day in such a… |
Sequence 8evidently there is tremendous attraction felt by the child for the spoken word, for the way people talk. One will even acquire… |
Sequence 10Neill: l had the wrong experience- Montessori: But if you want to know what I'm doing in my old age, I'm trying to… |
Sequence 1Pre-school Readiness by Lili E. Peller Ms. Pellers article on readiness once again illustrates her Montessori orientation to… |
Sequence 3These changes mean that au1omaticall} the roles and responsibilities of all other institutions having anything to do with… |
Sequence 1Towards AMI Summer Training in America by David Kahn With the reorganization of AMI in America, and the expansion of its… |
Sequence 1Montessori and the Special Child by Jon Osterkorn Little did Dr. Montessori realize as she passed through the gates of the… |
Sequence 1Psychoanalytic View of Multi-age Group Settings by Lili E. Peller Ms. Peller demonstrates by research and polemic that mufti-… |
Sequence 238 presentation of certain themes and that they made prolonged use of detenninate elements of the materials. When this… |
Sequence 1Reorganization of AMI: Administrators Meet at Unicoi by John K. Long "Let us not be limited by patterns of the past… |
Sequence 4Reorganization of AMI: Administrators Meet at Unicoi by John K. Long "Let us not be limited by patterns of the past… |
Sequence 1338 presentation of certain themes and that they made prolonged use of detenninate elements of the materials. When this… |
Sequence 28Psychoanalytic View of Multi-age Group Settings by Lili E. Peller Ms. Peller demonstrates by research and polemic that mufti-… |
Sequence 1010 I. Process A. To effect types of government within the real functioning of the middle school (e.g. aristocracy, oligarchy… |
Sequence 1212 B. PoUtical and Social Change (looking at the peasant movements in Germany, France, and America; the development of unions… |
Sequence 3The 8th grade literature program is similar in structure but the material read is dif- ferent and more complex. For example,… |
Sequence 1Montessori Education: Abiding Contributions and Contemporary Challenges by David Elkind Maria Montessori was one of the… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 1Marva Collins American Public Education, and Maria Montessori by Rita Kramer Ri1a Kramer presems Momessori in a posi1h'… |
Sequence 3sacrificed subject matter, being more concerned with how they taught than what they taught ... It is a mistake to assume that… |
Sequence 9author. Mary Antin, saw the promise of America as an opportunity, not an assurance. In America, everybody had a chance, but it… |
Sequence 3The catechesis of the Good Shepherd in North America had grown from a tiny mus- tard seed so small that you could blow it away… |
Sequence 1"Life is a Series of Rebirths" by David Kahn The 1983 Summer Institute One did not know what to expect at… |
Sequence 13. Literature and creative writing should be included in Montessori training, perhaps better integrated with grammar. 4 . A… |
Sequence 1Montessori, Freud and Lili Peller by Emma Plank Emma Plank's brilliant introduction to Peller denotes not only Ms. Plank… |
Sequence 4BOOKS ABOUT MONTESSORI: METHOD, MOVEMENT, AND THEORY Bailey, Carolyn Sherwin. (1915). Montessori children. New York: Henry… |
Sequence 911-a Lyon, Peter. (1963). Success stor : the life and times of S. s. McClure (pp. 350-52). New York: Charles Scribner… |
Sequence 3536 Berliner, Michael S. (1975). Montessori and social development. The Constructive Triangle, l, 54-64, (10).… |
Sequence 5960 Evans, Olive. (1968, July 7). The Montessori method--pro and con. New York Times, .2, p. 4, (1). Fleege, Urban. ( 1968… |
Sequence 6465 Bell, Mrs. Alexander Graham. (1914). What the Montessori method means to me. Freedom for the Child, !, 7-10, (3). Berger… |
Sequence 66Cohen, Sol. (1972). Montessori comes to America, 1911-1917. Notre Dame Journal of Education, 1, 358-372, (14). Cook,… |
Sequence 7071 Latifi, Azra. (1973). Around the Child, The discovery of the child and of an aim for life • ..!..?., 59-60, ( 2).… |
Sequence 7576 Siquerra, T. N. (1957). Montessori for children. Journal of Education and Psychology. Reprinted (1957). Around the… |
Sequence 106107 Centenary ce le brat ions in 1970. ( 1969). Communications, i, 29-30, (2). Centenary celebrations in 1970. (1970).… |
Sequence 107108 Dr. Montessori's aim. (1913, December 9). New York Times, (1). Dr. Montessori with her new race plan. (1913,… |
Sequence 111112 ( 1). Montessori' s reception in Rome. (1914). Freedom for the Child, l, 14, (1). Montessori in Vienna:… |
Sequence 119120 Spectator, ( 1952). 188. 599, ( l). Tablet (London), (1952, May 23). 199. p. 405, (1). La Dotteresa, (1952, May 19… |
Sequence 132134 Bell, Alexander Graham. (1914). Montessori Education Association meeting. Beinn Bhreagh recorder, .!J., 229, (1). Bell… |
Sequence 140142 Karlson, Alfred L. & Stodolsky, Susan S.(1973) Predicting school outcomes from observations of child behavior… |
Sequence 143145 Maraschiello, Richard. (1981). Evaluation of the rekinder arten head start program 1979-1980. (Report No, 8132.… |
Sequence 145Fisher, Maurice D. (1971). Educational assumptions for constructing objectives and evaluating programs for culturally… |
Sequence 149Foster, Lawrence J. (1970). Maria Montessori and modern educational thought some criticism of the Montessori method… |
Sequence 150152 Maas, Minerva Constance.(1971). An analysis of Froebel's play and Montessori's work in terms of their… |
Sequence 151153 Hornberger, Mary Alice. (1982). The developmental psychology of Maria Montes- sori (Italy). (Unpublished doctoral… |
Sequence 162164 Miezitis, Solveiga. (1971). The Montessori method: Some recent research. Interchange. 3.. 41-59, (17). Reprinted (… |
Sequence 168170 Deitchmann, Robert & Newmanm Isadore. (1976). The use of parent input in program evaluation: one parameter in… |
Sequence 169171 Dwyer, Muriel. (1970). Report form Tanzania. Communications, ill, 15-17, (3). Elisabeth, Sr. M. (1967). Around the… |
Sequence 170172 Gans, Ruth (1979). Consultation: A rationale for the total school approach. 30-32, (3). The Constructive Triangle… |
Sequence 184186 Katz, Prof. D. (1950). The psychology of form. Italian edition: Einaudi. This seems to be a book entitled… |
Sequence 199Donahue, Sonja. (1970). Summary of the 3-6 sector AMS teacher training committee. The Constructive Triangle, 1, 10-42, (… |
Sequence 200202 Hanrath, c. .!., 7-8, (1972). (2) . First AMI training course in Mexico. Comnrnunications, l Harmon, Thomas. (1967… |
Sequence 201Kahn, David. (1981). Some higher education guidelines for the prospective Montessori teacher. NAMTA Quarterly, 2, 32-34… |
Sequence 202204 Midwest training course, Chicago, Illinois. (1965). The Constructive Triangle, !, 21, (1). Montessori in America.… |
Sequence 2labelled - and libelled - as a pornographer. That is the method of character assassination, of attacking people - to take what… |
Sequence 3Professor Moritaki and Mr. Takahashi but they were more than puzzled to know what they could do to change what they saw as the… |
Sequence 5A second strategy open to the copywriter - and this is particularly useful for what might be called "luxuries&… |
Sequence 1Lecture aosing the Congress by Maria Montessori Montessori projects her own wish for a greater participation of the child in… |
Sequence 3Missionaries of Charity, the sisters of Mother Teresa. At every step of their development I was wishing I'd taken the… |
Sequence 3Bambino, was formed to develop materials and to continue the study of the develop- ment of the religious potential in children… |
Sequence 2Catholic girl's high school all at the same time. Next, 1 did all the planning, administrating, and teaching of a new… |
Sequence 3'What kind of a human being will I be todayr How will I affect others today?' It is these thoughts that explain why… |
Sequence 15THE FARM EXPERIENCE: ITS IMPORTANCE IN A CHILD'S LIFE by Richard Barker Richard Barker's perceptive correlations… |
Sequence 19housing, feeding, reproduction and marketing management of poultry. This effort has immersed Dan, for an extended period, in… |
Sequence 23AN OVERVIEW OF ADOLESCENCE by Phil Gang The Origins of Adolescence Adolescence is viewed today as a period between puberty… |